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Surveillance of Barrett’s oesophagus allows us to study the evolutionary dynamics of a human neoplasm over time. Here we use multicolour fluorescence in situ hybridization on brush cytology specimens, from two time points with a median interval of 37 months in 195 non-dysplastic Barrett's patients, and a third time point

Surveillance of Barrett’s oesophagus allows us to study the evolutionary dynamics of a human neoplasm over time. Here we use multicolour fluorescence in situ hybridization on brush cytology specimens, from two time points with a median interval of 37 months in 195 non-dysplastic Barrett's patients, and a third time point in a subset of 90 patients at a median interval of 36 months, to study clonal evolution at single-cell resolution. Baseline genetic diversity predicts progression and remains in a stable dynamic equilibrium over time. Clonal expansions are rare, being detected once every 36.8 patient years, and growing at an average rate of 1.58 cm[superscript 2] (95% CI: 0.09–4.06) per year, often involving the p16 locus. This suggests a lack of strong clonal selection in Barrett’s and that the malignant potential of ‘benign’ Barrett’s lesions is predetermined, with important implications for surveillance programs.

ContributorsMartinez, Pierre (Author) / Timmer, Margriet R. (Author) / Lau, Chiu T. (Author) / Calpe, Silvia (Author) / del Carmen Sancho-Serra, Maria (Author) / Straub, Danielle (Author) / Baker, Ann-Marie (Author) / Meijer, Sybren L. (Author) / ten Kate, Fiebo J. W. (Author) / Mallant-Hent, Rosalie C. (Author) / Naber, Anton H. J. (Author) / van Oijen, Arnoud H. A. M. (Author) / Baak, Lubbertus C. (Author) / Scholten, Pieter (Author) / Bohmer, Clarisse J. M. (Author) / Fockens, Paul (Author) / Bergman, Jacques J. G. H. M. (Author) / Maley, Carlo (Author) / Graham, Trevor A. (Author) / Krishnadath, Kausilia K. (Author) / Biodesign Institute (Contributor)
Created2016-08-19